Eaglesmith To Perform in Nipigon and White River

"We’ve followed him for years” said Gary Timms who travelled from Manitouwadge to see Eaglesmith in White River in August 2010. Photo OntarioNewsNorth.com

Last August, when Fred Eaglesmith performed at the White River Legion Hall to kick off the community’s Winnie The Pooh Festival, he promised his Northern Ontario fans, which had come for the concert from towns accross the Northshore including Wawa, Schreiber, Terrace Bay, Manitouwadge, Pic Mobert and others, that he would try to be return in 2011.  He also told OntarioNewsNorth.com then that he hoped, eventually, to play every town in Northwestern Ontario – it seemed like a lofty goal but Eaglesmith has earned a loyal following of Northshore fans during his carreer and though they don’t mind travelling to see him perform he does enjoy giving back by treating them to hometown shoes.  Well, Eaglesmith is staying true to his word with 2 shows planned on the Northshore in August of 2011.  First Nipigon area music lovers will enjoy a show August 9th at the Nipigon Legion Hall, next those on the east can see him at the White River Legion Hall the following evening, August 10th.

Gary Timms of Manitouwadge had attended the show in White River last year, brinign along his teenage son along and the pair agreed the trip had been worthwhile “He isn’t just a great performer, he’s a comedian too” said Robyn Timms (son) who couldn’t help sharing a few of the jokes Eaglesmith had told. The pair were a great example of the wide demographic Eaglesmith appeals to as the approximately 130 fans who had filled the White River Legion Hall included people of every walk of life, describing themselves as lovers of a plethera of musical genres.

Fred Eaglesmith’s 2011 Back Roads Rock ‘n Roll Hayride will play five live concert dates in Northern Ontario in the second week of August, which is more shows than ever for Fred’s old and new music fans in this part of the world:

  • Atikokan, Sunday August 7, The Iron Mine, Errington Hall.   7 pm local time, 8 pm Thunder Bay time
  • Kakabeka Falls, Monday Aug 8, The Stanley Tavern  8 pm show
  • Nipigon, Tuesday, August 9, Nipigon Legion Hall   8 pm show
  • White River, Wednesday August 10, White River Legion   8 pm show
  • Sault Ste. Marie, Thursday, August 11, Algoma University, Shingwauk Theatre, 8 pm show

Advance  tickets $25 per show are available online at www.fredeaglesmith.com, and at venues in the communities where concerts are being held (see listings on Northern Ontario Calendar for details of where to purchase in your town).   Bring your friends and enjoy live music from an original Canadian singer songwriter.

MORE INFO

BIO

The New Yorker magazine said it best: “If you’re missing Fred Eaglesmith, you’re really missing out.” An award-winning and acclaimed music auteur of the highest order, he has forged a singular and distinctive legacy with his songs, recordings, live performances, achievements and impact unlike that of anyone else in contemporary music. And done so as a fiercely independent and original artist through the sheer power of the music he creates. 

His 18 albums over the last three decades — many of them released on his own label — have consistently evoked critical raves, and he’s been compared to a broad blue-ribbon list of musical icons. His fellow songwriters regularly record his songs and sing his praises. He hosts a number of music festivals across North America, where he plays hundreds of dates a year in addition to touring Europe and Australia. Devoted fans follow him from one show to another to savor what one reviewer calls the “fury and fun” of his concerts.

His releases consistently hit the upper reaches of the Americana charts, and he’s the only Canadian to ever write a No. 1 bluegrass hit. His songs have even become part of the course curriculum at two colleges, and the paintings he creates when not making music have been shown in humerous prestigious galleries.

His latest album, Cha Cha Cha, led to an appearance on David Letterman’s show, and featured some great songs, including Dynamite and Whiskey, and I Would.   Several songs featured harmonies with the Fabulous Ginn Sisters, who toured with Fred’s band across North America in 2010.  

Eaglesmith’s 2008 album Tinderbox, amply displays the qualities that have made Eaglesmith a true cult phenomenon. Nominated for a Juno Award for Roots & Traditional Album of the Year as well as making the short list for The Polaris Prize, the Top 10 Americana chart album explores spirituality , faith, life, love, labor and more within a full-blooded musical and lyrical experience that draws from folk, country, rock, gospel, old-time music, bluegrass and even spoken word to create a stunning contemporary roots music all its own. It’s been hailed as a “masterwork” (Philadelphia Inquirer), “milestone” and “one of the best albums of last year” (San Jose Metro) as well as “exceptional” (Americana Roots), “beautiful” (Ink 19), “magical” (Houston Press), “magnificent” (Rave), “hypnotic” (Santa Barbara News Press), “epic in scope and cinematic in effect” (Guelph Mercury) and “a deep, sad and masterful album that transcends genre and time. It is Tom Waits meets Pink Floyd meets Hank Williams” (Calgary Herald). 

Reviews of Tinderbox have also likened Eaglesmith to Bruce Springsteen and Woody Guthrie as well Texas singer-songwriter heroes Guy Clark, Steve Earle and Ray Wylie Hubbard (who says that as far as songwriters go, Eaglesmith “may be the best”) and even revered author James Agee to go alongside such previous critical comparisons as John Prine, Link Wray, T Bone Burnett, Del Shannon and, in his live shows, even Led Zeppelin. He followed the album by crisscrossing America and Canada to rapturous audience receptions as well as similar response on tours to Holland, Belgium, Great Britain and Australia.  

Eaglesmith comes by his exceptional musicality and lyrical command naturally and honestly, through dedication to his craft and delivery and building his following from the grassroots upwards ever since he left the family farm at age 15 to become an itinerant budding troubadour. His life story could in fact be the subject of one of his songs, which is one reason why Eaglesmith has such a deft touch for finding the literary significance within the lives of seemingly common people and rendering their tales, thoughts and feelings with profound humanity and sensitivity alongside a knack for creating a contextual sense of time and place that resonates with reality.

Hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer for his “devastatingly good, economical songwriting,” and noted by the Arizona Daily Star as “a prolific singer/songwriter often hailed as a genius at his craft,” Eaglesmith has had his songs recorded by such notable fellow songwriters as Toby Keith, The Cowboy Junkies, Chris Knight, Kasey Chambers, Mary Gauthier, Todd Snider and Dar Williams as well as bluegrass stars James King (who took Eaglesmith’s “Thirty Years of Farming” to the top of the bluegrass charts) and Ralph Stanley II, and has been the subject of three tribute albums. Martin Scorsese and James Caan have used his compositions in film projects, and Keith included Eaglesmith’s recording of “Thinking ‘Bout You” in his film “Broken Bridges” and its soundtrack CD. “His canon of well over 1,000 songs is stunning,” notes the New Brunswick Daily Gleaner.  

In live performance, Eaglesmith and his band “rock like punks on a mission.” and deliver “a truly timeless brand of primitive rock’n’roll [that is]exactly like the sort of music you dream of hearing in some crowded, hot, beery bar near closing time,” observes Amazon.com in reviews of his live albums. Onstage he is also a sharp between song raconteur whose tales and observations are as keen and compelling as his songs and frequently as hilarious as the best stand-up comedians. For many years running, he has hosted the annual Roots on the River festival in Vermont, the Fred Eaglesmith Texas Weekend at Gruene Hall (the mother church of the Lone Star State music scene) and two more yearly festivals in Canada. His youthful travels hopping freight trains inspired the Roots on the Rails rolling music festivals, for which he currently hosts two annual rail trips that ride everywhere from scenic and historic narrow gauge lines in the American West to, this last year, into the Canadian arctic. Through it all, Eaglesmith remains modest and resolutely hard working. He also gives generously of his time and talents to such causes as his own fundraising initiative to equip migrant farm workers with bicycles, reflectors and safety devices, Reflections, as well as being a spokesman, along with Bono and Alanis Morisette, for Oxfam’s Make Trade Fair campaign. He also does charity work for The Schizophrenia Society of Canada, The Fur and Feather Wildlife Center, The Equestrian Association for the Disabled, World Vision International and conservation efforts near where he lives in Southern Ontario.

“I have the weirdest career in the world, a little tiny career that works so well,” Eaglesmith concludes of the artistic niche he has carved out for himself. “I’m just so lucky and so fortunate, I try not to take it for granted.”

Visit Fred Eaglesmith’s website at: www.fredeaglesmith.com

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